
Health authorities in Denmark will no longer offer Covid booster jabs to members of their population who are age 50 and under, citing a low-risk of infection and natural immunity.
In the Danish Health Authority’s recent autumn and winter vaccine recommendations published Tuesday, the government agency indicates people over 50 and “people at the highest risk of becoming severely ill” will be offered boosters, but admitted people younger than 50 won’t need them because they do not “prevent infection.”
Danish Health Authority refuses to offer boosters to anyone under 50 years old & recognizes:
“People aged under 50 are generally not at particularly higher risk of becoming severely ill from COVID-19 [&] are well protected against becoming severely ill”https://t.co/Kxqra02bkP pic.twitter.com/X6mewOgVAH
— Prodigal (@ProdigalThe3rd) September 14, 2022
“The purpose of vaccination is not to prevent infection with covid-19, and people aged under 50 are therefore currently not being offered booster vaccination,” the Danish Health Authority’s website states, adding, “People aged under 50 are generally not at particularly higher risk of becoming severely ill from covid-19.”
The government recommendations also cite natural immunity when they say people younger than 50 aren’t at high risk because most have been vaccinated and experienced a Covid infection granting them “good immunity.”
“In addition, younger people aged under 50 are well protected against becoming severely ill from covid-19, as a very large number of them have already been vaccinated and have previously been infected with covid-19, and there is consequently good immunity among this part of the population.”
Last July, the Danish Health Authority announced a prohibition on jabs for children and young people under the age of 18 stating they “only very rarely become seriously ill from Covid-19.”
Denmark ENDS ALL Covid vaccinations for anyone under 18: “children and young people only very rarely become seriously ill from Covid-19 with the Omicron variant.” pic.twitter.com/lgH5MfCGLC
— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) August 9, 2022
Back in April, Denmark also became the first country in the European Union to announce it would halt its Covid vaccine program arguing “vaccine coverage in the Danish population is high, and the epidemic has reversed.”
“Therefore, the National Board of Health is now ending the broad vaccination efforts against Covid-19 for this season,” the Danish Health Authority stated at the time, going on to say it still encouraged people to complete any started vaccine courses.
Though they won’t openly admit it, the Danish government is evidently keen on protecting its taxpaying populace from taking unnecessary pharmaceuticals which have been shown to have possible adverse side effects.